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Should College Athletes Be Employees? House Panels Say No.

WASHINGTON, UNITED STATES, JUL 23 – The SCORE Act aims to regulate athlete compensation, provide NCAA antitrust protections, and limit collective bargaining rights after passing two House committees on a party-line vote.

  • Two U.S. House of Representatives committees on July 23 advanced the SCORE Act, making it the most comprehensive college sports bill in decades.
  • Shaped by long-standing lobbying, the bill stems from yearslong NCAA and power conference efforts to secure antitrust protections and address legal disputes in recent years.
  • The tally was deadlocked at 17, with Rep. Michael Rulli cast the deciding vote in the Education and the Workforce Committee.
  • Despite Republican backing, House Democrats mostly opposed, and negotiations between Ted Cruz and Democratic senators remain stalled, making House passage likely but Senate support uncertain.
  • If the bill moves to the Senate, approval remains uncertain as 60 votes are needed to prevent a filibuster, potentially delaying its passage.
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USA Today broke the news in United States on Wednesday, July 23, 2025.
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